-ball

English

Etymology

Back-formation from football. Journalist Jamie Braidwood suggests it may have been inspired by Michael Lewis' 2003 book Moneyball and its 2011 film adaptation.[1]

Suffix

-ball

  1. (chiefly UK, soccer) Refers to styles of football.
    Ange + ‎-ball → ‎Angeball
    hoof + ‎-ball → ‎hoofball
    • 2024 March 21, evelyn (@sngyf2), “evelyn on Twitter”, in Twitter[2], archived from the original on 28 July 2025:
      Now, Cityball always seems boring, like a factory where everyone just needs to do their specific tasks.
    • 2024 September 8, Allegrismo ♰ (@jogofuncional_), “Allegrismo ♰ on Twitter”, in Twitter[3], archived from the original on 28 July 2025:
      I miss him already. The clean sheets, and moments of magic from players that the modern systemball and possessionball cannot create. Southgate you're the one
    • 2025 February 16, Elton Welsby (@WelsbyElton), “Elton Welsby on Twitter”, in Twitter[4], archived from the original on 28 July 2025:
      The difference between Dycheball and Moyesball is quite considerable. So much easier on the eye for one thing. The shackles have been removed and it shows. No goals but more possession than we used to have.

Derived terms

English terms suffixed with -ball

References

  1. ^ Braidwood, Jamie (14 September 2024), “The insufferable rise and rise of 'Manager-Ball'”, in Independent[1], retrieved 29 July 2025.